Top 15 Tips For Saving Battery Life On iOS 8 [Guide]

Apple’s new iOS 8 software had reached 47 percent of users the last we heard, and although the major issues with the subsequent iOS 8.0.1 left many users panicking at the prospect of updating, those troubles seem to have faded with the roll-out of iOS 8.0.2 shortly after. We’ve already run through many of the new software’s features, from the more obvious to the slightly obscure, and in this round up of iOS 8-related tips, we’re going to show you how you can conserve battery.

1. Turn Wi-Fi Auto-Search To Off

As something of an extension to the first tip, you can also prevent your device from searching for networks all the time, which is not only unnecessary – you can toggle it on via the Control Center when you do wish to connect to a hotspot – but also a strain on the battery.

Go to Settings > Wi-Fi > Ask to Join Networks and toggle to OFF.

2. See Which Apps Are Using The Most Battery

In iOS 8, Apple has made it possible for users to check battery use on an app-by-app basis. Thus, by navigating through Settings > General > Usage > Battery Usage, you can quickly determine which apps are using your battery up the most, and either use them less, or even delete them altogether.

3. Turn off Parallax

The Parallax feature first rolled out with iOS 7, and as well as proving a bit of a headache in the literal sense for some users initially, also warrants additional battery. To disable it, go Settings > General > Accessibility > Reduce Motion, and toggle to ON.

4. Disable Background App Updates

Apps automatically updating to the latest version is seamless and all, but if you’re out and about and worried about keeping your device alive, having the latest version of Facebook installed becomes somewhat less important. To save battery, go to Settings > iTunes & App Store, and at the bottom, simply toggle Updates to OFF under Automatic Downloads.

5. Stop Backgrounded Apps From Refreshing

The great thing about disabling Background App Refresh is that it’s not all or nothing, so by going to Settings > General > Background App Refresh, you can pick and choose which you want to continue refreshing and which you’d like to kill off.

6. Location Services

Many apps unjustifiably ask to see your location, which is not only quite invasive, but when an app uses location services, it also dips into your battery life.

If you’re using, say, a navigation app, then obviously, Location Services are a must, but if not, Settings > Privacy > Location Services and remove those that you don’t feel need to know where you are.

7. Turn Off 4G LTE

It may be lightning quick, but 4G LTE is a battery hog, and if it’s not especially critical that you’re running a super-snappy connection, consider disabling 4G by going to Settings > Cellular > Enable LTE.

8. Disable Auto-Brightness & Dim Your Display

Auto-Brightness is self-explanatory in that it automatically brightens up your display, but the trade-off, as with many useful iOS 8 features, is that more battery is used than necessary.

In Settings > Display & Brightness, you can disable auto-brightness, and if you also turn the brightness down lower – as low as you can manage without it adversely affecting the experience – then you’ll save even more battery.

9. Disable Push Notifications For Certain Apps

Sure, being notified of that @mention or Facebook ‘Like’ is the be-all and end-all, but if you get any apps sending you push notifications that you tend to ignore, then head to Settings > Notifications, and under Include, toggle away.

10. Use Airplane Mode More

Although its probably critical that your iPhone is kept online at all times for obvious reasons, your iPad or iPod touch doesn’t need to be online when you’re, say, reading a book or watching a movie already downloaded to your device.

Airplane Mode is easily accessible from the Settings app or Control Center, and if you get yourself into the habit of utilizing it, you’ll be amazed by the additional time that your device remains powered up.

11. Disable System Services For Location

There are some background location services which take a toll on battery life without the user being known about it. Navigate to Settings > Privacy > Location Services > System Services and toggle off Location-Based Alerts, Location-Based iAds, Spotlight Suggestions, Wi-Fi Networking and Frequent Locations.

Note: you can toggle other services off too, but that might disable features for some apps, like Share My Location for Messages.

12. Disable Automatic Time Update

iOS keeps the device’s clock updated at all times, and in doing so, it uses your location, and hence takes its toll on battery life. To disable this feature, go to Settings > General > Date & Time and turn Set Automatically to OFF.

13. Turn Off Bluetooth

Bluetooth is turned on by default in iOS 8, and it’s a feature which can take its toll on battery life if kept on for no good reason. Simply slide up Control Center, and tap the Bluetooth icon to turn it off.

14. Disable Handoff & Suggested Apps

A killer iOS feature by a long shot, but a battery drainer nonetheless. Simply navigate to Settings > General > Handoff & Suggested Apps and turn every toggle OFF in the resulting page.

15. Disable AirDrop

It sounds like an awesome feature for quickly sharing stuff between iOS users, but it can be a battery hog when left running in the background.

Simply drag up from the bottom of the display to bring up Control Center and then tap on AirDrop and then tap on Off.

And that’s your stack of battery-saving tips. Trying them all out, you’ll notice considerable improvements in your device’s battery retention, and as well as allowing you to use your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch for longer, will also protect the integrity of it as time progresses.

So, basically disable everything on your iPhone and use it as an iPod touch…

msbihli

Why not just tell people to just turn off their phone between uses? All these tips make the phone just about as useful.

san q

Good suggestions..4g LTE is really not necessary if your just checking fb n IG especially if your on a 2 GB data plan.. Glad I still have Verizon’s unlimited data plan

Guest

Battery drains on my 4S with little RAM that searches for 3G service and heats up.

Anthony Dominick Fontana

Battery drains on my 4S with little RAM when searching for 3G service and heats up.

Abu Laila

Lol exactly…..

Hangover

Top 1 Tip For Saving battery life.

1. Stop using your phone.

Mecki

Have you any hard numbers for your claims? I think most of it is actually snake oil.

AFAIK UMTS (3G) needs much more battery than LTE (4G) (lower power consumption was one of the design goals of LTE).

Also enabling Location Based Alerts does nothing, unless you have any location based alerts set (e.g. an active location based reminder); if you don’t have one, and most people don’t use that feature to begin with, it’s not active in the first place and then disabling this setting can’t buy you anything. And even if you have such an alert set, the feature primary relies on your mobile phone cell (which is tracked anyway unless you’re in Airplane Mode), secondary on your surrounding WiFi networks (which is tracked anyway unless you disabled WiFi completely) and only in very rare cases may query the GPS location; so it should use very little battery.

BTW “Ask to join networks” does not control if the device scans for networks, it will always scan if WiFi is enabled and it is not connected to a network right now (otherwise how could it automatically detect and join known networks?), it only controls if the device will ask you to join unknown networks if no known network is found – so disabling it shouldn’t preserve any battery (prompting is not expensive, scanning is).

I doubt that setting the date/time automatically uses any battery at all as this information is primary received from the mobile phone network (with high accuracy) whenever your device connects to a mobile phone cell (and it must do so otherwise you cannot be called – and being able to receive phone calls is a main purpose of a phone, don’t you think?).

Even worse, the iPhone uses the current date and time to calculate the position of the GPS satellites when it needs to get your exact location; the position can be calculated quite well from the current date/time and if known, the GPS position can be determined quickly. Yet if you disable time update, the clock may be off and if it is off by too much, satellite position cannot be calculated correctly and then the phone must perform a satellite search, which takes very long and sucks battery like crazy.